Freeze 23 12 15 Sia Siberia Diablo Face Off Xxx... Direct
Then the hashtag #SiaSiberia returned. Not as a ghost, but as a creator. She had given them a new piece of content: the story of how she saved them from themselves.
One night, a new video went viral on MainFrame (a fictional TikTok successor). A popular streamer known as GlitchPrince was doing a “Siberian Sleepover” stunt—24 hours alone in Sibfilm-17. The chat was manic. Donations poured in. Then, at hour 22, GlitchPrince’s face froze. His eyes did that thing. The Diablo thing. Freeze 23 12 15 Sia Siberia Diablo Face Off XXX...
But that’s a story for another trending topic. Then the hashtag #SiaSiberia returned
For six months, she had been scraping metadata from every video that featured Diablo Face. Not the content itself—the laugh tracks, the reaction compilations, the ironic edits set to phonk music—but the gaps . The milliseconds of corrupted frames. The identical geo-tags buried in the code. All of them traced back to one place: the abandoned Sibfilm-17 studio outside Novosibirsk. The same studio where her own career had ended in flames. One night, a new video went viral on
Sia had a choice. She could expose it, become a hero, reclaim her fame. Or she could do what she had done twelve years ago: burn it all down.
She opened her livestream—her first in over a decade. The title: “Sia Siberia vs. Diablo Face: The Final Edit.” Within seconds, a million viewers flooded in. The chat became a screaming waterfall of emojis and conspiracy links.